JULY 1, 2009
Dedication Ceremony To Be Held For New VA Clinic In Washington
State.
The
Tacoma (WA) News Tribune
(7/1, Relyea) reports, "A dedication ceremony for a long-awaited
medical clinic for veterans is set for Thursday, July 2, on the
second floor of the Mount Vernon Medical Building at 307 S. 13th
St." The "ceremony for the Department of Veterans Affairs' new
Community Based Outpatient Clinic," which "opened May 18 near
Skagit Valley Hospital," is scheduled to run from "10:30 a.m. to
noon. Featured speakers will include" US Sen. Patty Murray
(D-WA) and US Rep. Rick Larsen (D-WA), "who spearheaded the
effort to expand VA medical services."
Impact:
Mount Vernon CBOC
VA, Military Urged To Do More To Reduce Smoking Rates.
In continuing coverage, the
Air Force Times (7/1,
Kennedy) reports, "Medical experts say they have a solution for
the military's increasing smoking rates: Ban it," because,
according "to the Committee on Smoking Cessation in Military and
Veteran Populations, in a report from the Institute of Medicine
of the National Academies, the math just doesn't add up for an
organization that depends on physical fitness from its
employees." The Times notes that it "cost the Veterans Affairs
Department $5 billion to treat smoking-related emphysema in
2008, and in 2006, the Military Health System spent about $564
million on tobacco-related costs." And although the "committee
determined both the Defense Department and VA are doing some
things right - such as anti-smoking campaigns and, for the VA,
smoking-cessation programs - they're far behind on other
measures," such as making their healthcare facilities
smoke-free. The committee did acknowledge, however, "that the
military and VA face special challenges: Troops tend to take up
smoking when they deploy, and cigarettes are highly addictive,"
which "means they're less likely to stop when they get home." In
addition, "people with depression or post-traumatic stress
disorder are more likely to smoke."
Impact:
VA, DoD, Smoking Cessation
Kao Says He Will Not Be A "Scapegoat" For Problems At
Philadelphia VAMC.
In continuing coverage, the
Philadelphia Inquirer (7/1,
Goldstein, 339K) reports, "The doctor accused of giving the
wrong radiation dose to dozens of prostate-cancer patients" at
the Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center "defended
himself" Monday "for the first time, saying that many critics
fail to understand the complexity of the treatments. Just
because patients didn't get the prescribed radiation dose
doesn't mean their care was ineffective," Dr. Gary D. Kao told a
US Senate hearing in Philadelphia. Kao "admitted problems with
the program and said he shared some blame, but 'I am not willing
to be the scapegoat for the complex, systematic problems.'" Kao
"also said there was no definition of what constitutes a
radiation-dosage mistake and when it should be reported." But
Steven Reynolds of the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission
"disputed Kao's testimony, saying that the agency had long
required reports when the dose is more than 20 percent off from
what the doctor prescribed. And errant seed placement -- which
Kao contended is commonplace -- is in fact rare in other
programs, Reynolds said." The Inquirer adds that VA and NRC
probes of the Philadelphia VAMC's prostate cancer treatment
program "are expected to be completed later this summer."
The fourth item in the
Washington Times' (7/1)
"Washington in 5 minutes" column also notes Kao's testimony, as
does the
Boston Globe's (6/30,
Cooney) "White Coat Notes" blog, as well as a report aired by
KETK-TV
Impact:
Philadelphia VA, cancer
treatments